Greenwich Time

Internet outage raises Taiwan fears of Chinese sabotage

- By Meaghan Tobin and Vic Chiang

MATSU, Taiwan — For the past month, an entire island has depended on Li Tsui-yun’s mobile phone store for internet access.

Since the undersea internet cables that serve the Matsu island chain — part of Taiwan but at points only a few miles from China — were severed just over a month ago, Li has felt like everyone on the island of Nangan has turned up at her outpost of Chunghwa Telecom to get online: soldiers calling family, kids doing their homework, hotel owners checking online bookings.

On the coldest days, Li handed out hot tea at the door and kept the store open late so people could sit inside. “The other night there were cars stopped all around,” said Chen Pao-chung, who had parked his empty bus outside Li’s store to check his messages.

The cause of Matsu’s internet outage is familiar: Chinese fishing boats, so omnipresen­t that the nightly glow of their green lights has become known as the islands’ own aurora borealis.

Wayward anchors and trawling nets have taken out the islands’ two internet cables 27 times in the past five years. But this is the first time Matsu has faced such a long outage, as one of the world’s few dozen repair ships won’t be available to fix the breaks until the end of April.

The first cable was damaged Feb. 2 by a Chinese fishing boat and the second Feb. 8 by a Chinese cargo ship, according to Taiwanese authoritie­s. This plunged residents back in time and forced them to confront what life would be like if increasing tensions with China made Taiwan’s internet infrastruc­ture an intentiona­l target.

Tensions have flared in recent months following U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taipei in August.

There is no evidence that the cables were severed intentiona­lly, according to Chunghwa Telecom. But analysts and local officials have said the frequent cable breaks

caused by Chinese vessels amount to purposeful harassment that keeps Taiwan’s government and telecom companies scrambling to provide basic services.

“What happened in Matsu can be seen as a warning signal,” said Wen Lii, the head of the local chapter of Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP). “If an internet outage could happen for Matsu, the same thing could happen for Taiwan — what would we do if Taiwan’s 14 internatio­nal undersea cables were damaged?”

The Matsu island chain was on the front line of fighting during the Chinese civil war in the 1940s and its closest island is just six miles off the coast of China’s Fujian province. The islands, home to about 14,000 people, depend heavily on tourists drawn to the quiet, once heavily fortified beaches where bunkers have become hip cafes and guesthouse­s.

But without the internet, business has slowed to a trickle. Half a dozen hotel and restaurant owners said that the ongoing outage meant their business was down at least 50 percent compared

with the same time last year.

“At its worst point, the phone barely rang at all, and the calls that did get through were full of noise,” said Wang Yuansong, who owns a hotel near the airport on Beigan, one of the Matsu islands. “There was no way to communicat­e normally.”

After a shorter outage put his business on hold last April, Wang was prepared for this one. He had friends on Taiwan’s main island send him prepaid mobile SIM cards, then put the cards into his own internet routers to make shareable WiFi hotspots for guests. The weak signal was barely usable, but better than nothing, he said.

Chunghwa Telecom has set up a high-powered microwave radio transmissi­on from towers near Taipei to provide a backup signal for online banking and other basic services for Matsu residents, but service is intermitte­nt and slows to a crawl during peak use.

Chinese military ships, fishing vessels and sand dredgers regularly cross into Taiwan’s waters using what military analysts describe as greyzone

tactics — part intimidati­on campaign, part resource extraction — intended to keep Taiwan’s people and government on alert.

The Chinese Communist Party government shelled Matsu for decades after the nationalis­t Kuomintang (KMT) government retreated to Taiwan in defeat in 1949, and gained control of some of the outlying islands that are much closer to China than Taiwan.

In doing so, they drew an invisible boundary across previously freeflowin­g fishing grounds. Matsu’s rocky coastline, lined with the same type of stone houses built in Fujian, was fortified with land mines.

But China’s proximity is not just a threat for Matsu residents — for many, their neighbor is also a source of practical solutions. During the most acute parts of the outage, some Matsu residents stayed online using SIM cards from China.

Some locals found ways to get SIM cards from China and connect to cell signals from inside the Great Firewall — a lifeline despite Beijing’s restrictio­ns.

The problem posed by

the frequent cable breakages — and their costly repairs — is one thing officials from Taiwan’s two rival political parties can agree on. Kuomintang and DPP leaders have expressed concerns about Taiwan’s preparedne­ss for future breaks.

“Taiwan needs to be better prepared in case of any type of emergency, regardless of whether it’s a natural disaster or a military threat,” said Lii, the head of the local DPP chapter, who called on the internatio­nal community to help strength Taiwan’s communicat­ion capabiliti­es.

Military analysts and officials said the frequent

breaks highlight the vulnerabil­ity of Taiwan’s internet infrastruc­ture.

“Cable sabotage could become our era’s blockade — and unlike past generation­s’ blockades, it can be conducted on the sly,” warned Elizabeth Braw, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, in an analysis for Foreign Policy.

Taipei is reportedly in talks with domestic and internatio­nal investors to establish its own lowEarth-orbit satellite internet service, similar to Elon Musk’s Starlink, which has provided internet to Ukraine with some assistance from the United States government.

 ?? An Rong Xu/Washington Post ?? Residents of Matsu, Taiwan, use the WiFi service at the Chunghwa Telecom store in Nangan island. The store has acted as a hot spot for residents to go online after internet service to the island went down.
An Rong Xu/Washington Post Residents of Matsu, Taiwan, use the WiFi service at the Chunghwa Telecom store in Nangan island. The store has acted as a hot spot for residents to go online after internet service to the island went down.
 ?? An Rong Xu/For The Washington Post ?? Microwave transmitte­rs help boost internet signals for the residents of the Matsu Islands.
An Rong Xu/For The Washington Post Microwave transmitte­rs help boost internet signals for the residents of the Matsu Islands.
 ?? An Rong Xu/For The Washington Post ?? Matsu mayor Wang Chung-ming has proposed laying an undersea internet cable between Matsu and Fujian.
An Rong Xu/For The Washington Post Matsu mayor Wang Chung-ming has proposed laying an undersea internet cable between Matsu and Fujian.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States